Payson House 91 Payson Avenue, Inwood, Manhattan, NY 10034
Pre-war Co-op
- 72 residences
- 6 stories
- BUILT 1935
The Details About 91 Payson Avenue
One of the loveliest Art Deco buildings in Inwood, this 1935 co-op is immaculately maintained and refurbished. This historic gem offers beautifully planted gardens, a resident superintendent, laundry, storage, package room and parking (waiting list). Inwood Hill Park with rambling hiking trails and recreation is literally out your front door. The "A" express train, restaurants, parking and shop...
- Package room
- Common garden
- Common courtyard
- Elevators
- Central laundry room
- Live-in Super + Porter
- Outdoor Parking (wait list)
- Pet friendly
Payson House Units
- transaction type
- Sold
- Rented
Units | Price | Beds | Baths | Half Baths | Interior Sq.Ft | Type | Contact | Floorplan |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Get to know Inwood
Much like other areas of northern Manhattan, Inwood was spread out and bucolic until mass transit arrived in the early 20th century. Some remnants remain, including the Seaman-Drake Arch. The marble structure formerly served as the entrance to a 19th-century hillside mansion and today sits between local businesses as the only free-standing arch in Manhattan outside Washington Square Park. There’s also the Dyckman House, a Dutch Colonial-style farmhouse, the oldest remaining structure of its kind in the borough. Art Deco apartments constructed around the 1930s serve as a bit of a modern-day signature for the area, along with a historic district consisting of two-story Tudor and Colonial Revival houses built between 1920 and 1925. The northern terminus of the island of Manhattan — Marble Hill is the northernmost neighborhood — Inwood puts a fittingly distinctive cap on the borough’s enduring majesty.
Inwood Neighborhood Guide